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Word: hearted (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

Eight surgeons on four continents have now performed heart transplants, but the one who stepped most prominently last week from under the nonglare lights of his operating theater into the spotlight of world attention was a tall Texan. Denton Arthur Cooley, 47. The mere fact that Dr. Cooley did three heart transplants within five days was a notable achievement. To Cooley himself, this was incidental and to some extent accidental-the timing of transplants depends on having suitable donors and recipients available simultaneously. The operations, says Cooley, are technically less difficult than many other open-heart procedures, of which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Surgery: The Hearts of Texas | 5/17/1968 | See Source »

...resident at the Hopkins' University Hospitals and served as what he calls "a very junior assistant" to the great surgeon Alfred Blalock, who was soon to perform the world's first blue-baby operations. That association determined Cooley's future course, and he has been a heart man ever since...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Surgery: The Hearts of Texas | 5/17/1968 | See Source »

Miniaturized Surgery. After a year in London working with Britain's noted heart surgeon Lord Brock, Cooley returned to his native Houston and was associated at Baylor University College of Medicine with Surgeon Michael E. DeBakey (TIME cover, May 28, 1965). The DeBakey-Cooley team at Methodist Hospital pioneered many innovations in heart surgery before Cooley moved next door to St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital, which is also affiliated with Baylor. There he has established an independent reputation as one of the greatest of heart surgeons and almost certainly the world's greatest in the incredibly difficult...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Surgery: The Hearts of Texas | 5/17/1968 | See Source »

Doubt about the nature of political science is at the heart of academic criticism. But what sort of political science should be adopted...

Author: By James C. Kitch, | Title: When Will Intellectuals Become Activists? | 5/14/1968 | See Source »

...various unexpected materials of which this show is constructed seem to form an uncanny but logical whole, they often do so by contrast. If their contact is familiar, it is also often acrimonious. In fact, the heart of the dramatic technique of White Sale is irony extended and complex enough to avoid the schematization which cripples adventures into ironic dramatic montage. White Sale is in no sense didactic, and the ironies which arise out of the juxtapositions of its sequences have nothing to do with simple undercutting. For White Sale, irony becomes an instrument of investigation, not a tool...

Author: By Peter Jaszi, | Title: White Sale | 5/10/1968 | See Source »

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